Heads Up for Low-Flying PlanesA park is carved out amid aircraft in Santa Monica,
California.

By Morris Newman

Like a plant sprouting through a crack in the pavement, the
Santa Monica Airport Park appears to have broken through the asphalt and
concrete of this industrial site in the West Los Angeles area. This is how a
park might look if parks had wills of their own and were able to assert their
greenness into a largely plant-free environment of old stucco buildings,
hangars, and small aircraft tie-downs.

While a park tucked inside a general aviation airport might
seem incongruous to some, none of the two dozen people present on a July
afternoon seemed to notice. A succession of parents retrieved their
six-year-olds from summer camp. Couples walked up and down sloping pathways on
either side of this long and narrow park. Two large dogs, one yellow and the
other black, lolled in the soft decomposed granite in the off-leash area,
ignoring repeated calls of “come ’ere, boy.” Only the soccer fields were empty,
although they get plenty of use during evenings and weekends.

The popularity of the park is easy to understand: Open space
is scarce in this dense residential area, where the small, oceanfront city of
Santa Monica meets the larger city of Los Angeles. Although Santa Monica
generally gets good marks for open space, this part of town is park starved,
and the airport facility is the first new park in this rapidly growing city in
24 years. The full-to-overflowing program of dog park, tot lot, picnic tables,
active green space, sports fields, plus a concrete platform for large-scale
public art installations, testifies to the pent-up demand for active open space
in a largely single-family neighborhood. (During opening day festivities last
year, a group of Los Angeles residents picketed the park, protesting the ban on
Los Angeles dogs in the Santa Monica park. Santa Monica, a socially conscious
city, later opened the dog park to all, controlling crowds with a licensing
system.)

Santa Monica Airport Park is a long-held, hard-won goal of
the city. Prior to the design of the park, the city hired Ah’bé Landscape
Architects to create a master plan of open spaces throughout the 227-acre
airport. The airport park, located just off a major boulevard, is the first
open space in the master plan to be realized.